In 2007, Whiting-Turner was awarded a $134.4-million contract to build the
United States Marine Forces Special Operations Command 500-acre, 37-building complex at
Camp Lejeune in
North Carolina. In 2011, the company completed construction of the
NASA Langley Research Center Headquarters, for which it won several awards for
green building. In June of 2013, Whiting-Turner completed a $100 million renovation of the
Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, designed by PGAV Architects out of
Kansas. In 2015, the firm finished construction of the $87 million
McMurtry Building at
Stanford University. The 96,000 square foot building houses the university's Art History Department and the Art and Architecture Library on campus and was designed by
Diller Scofidio + Renfro. In 2016, renovations of the
University of Virginia's historic
rotunda were completed by Whiting-Turner. The building was originally built in 1826 and was designed by
Thomas Jefferson. The Rotunda is the focal point of the University of Virginia's campus and is represented in the university's logo. In 2019, Whiting-Turner completed the 250,000-square-foot renovation of the newly renamed
Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse, home of the
Cleveland Cavaliers. The $185 million renovation was funded by a 50-50 private/public funding agreement between the city of
Cleveland and the Cavaliers organization. In 2022, the firm was awarded a $173 million contract to renovate a building in Suitland, Maryland where the
Bureau of Labor Statistics national office will move in 2024-2025 to be on the same campus as the headquarters of the
U.S. Census Bureau and the
Bureau of Economic Analysis. The firm is the general contractor for
Under Armour's new global headquarters in the
Port Covington neighborhood of Baltimore, Maryland. The new facility will feature an NCAA-regulation track and field facility, retail outlets, and a 280,000-square-foot cross-laminated
mass timber office building. The project is a multi-billion-dollar endeavor expected to be completed in early 2025. Whiting-Turner also leads the $5 Billion John Palmour Manufacturing Center for Silicon Carbine project in
Siler City, North Carolina. The 445-acre facility will produce
silicon carbide wafers needed to make silicon carbide chips for many electronics and electric vehicles. The project, which is expected to be completed in 2030, is funded in part by the
CHIPS and Science Act signed by President
Joe Biden. == References ==